NJ DEP supports pipeline in Pines

Gas preferable to coal power

Dec. 13, 2013

Written by

Wayne Parry

Associated Press

PEMBERTON TWP. — New Jersey environmental officials spoke out Friday in favor of a proposed pipeline through the Pinelands, saying it would drastically reduce air pollution in the region by enabling an old coal-burning power plant to use cleaner natural gas.

Three air quality officials from the state Department of Environmental Protection spoke at a Pinelands Commission hearing Friday in favor of a hotly debated plan to run a 22-mile natural gas pipeline through the environmentally sensitive and legally protected Pinelands region.

It would start in Maurice River, travel through Estell Manor and connect to the BL England power plant in Cape May County.

Frank Steitz, assistant director of the DEP’s air quality permitting division, said his agency issued an air quality plan for the project in April.

He said enabling BL England to switch to natural gas would double its efficiency and drastically reduce pollution in the region. The plant signed an agreement with the DEP to switch to natural gas.

He said the changeover will cut the plant’s carbon dioxide emissions in half, virtually eliminate sulfur dioxide emissions that can contribute to acid rain and reduce mercury emissions 94 percent.

“It’s an older plant, over 50 years old, and it’s the last coal plant in New Jersey without a good air pollution control,” said William O’Sullivan, the DEP’s air quality director. “This plant burns the highest sulfur coal in New Jersey. By far, gas is the cleanest option.”

The commission would have to approve the plan for it to proceed because the 22-mile pipe would run through the protected Pinelands.

Under a memorandum of agreement that could be voted on Jan. 10, South Jersey Gas would pay $8 million to a Pinelands fund to help clear the project’s final hurdle. The deal, in effect, would exempt the pipeline from a ban on new transmission lines in the 1.1-million-acre Pinelands reserve.

Environmentalists oppose the pipeline, fearing damage to the fragile region. But union workers and business leaders want it approved for the jobs and added energy reliability it would provide. As it has for months, that debate played itself out again at Friday’s commission meeting.

“Serving BL England and providing additional energy supplies to Cape May County is not the responsibility of the Pinelands Commission,” said Cape May County resident Martha Wright. “It is not your mission to create jobs.”

But Bill Blankenship, a BL England employee, said the pipeline will enable the plant to continue operating.

“Coal is not the way to go,” he said. “We can get clean natural gas and protect the environment and protect jobs.”